spacer
Donate Image

Your Donations Count Donate Graphicat the Westside Observer!

Carol Kocivar / On Education

storm

What happened to the education budget?

California protects education funding

• • • • • • • • August 6, 2024 • • • • • • • •

Whew! After months of uncertainty over a multi-billion dollar budget gap, California came through again to protect core funding for public education. The budget for 2024-25 provides increased support for programs such as the Local Control Funding Formula ( LCFF), special educationtransitional kindergartennutrition, and preschool.

Finding a solution wasn't easy, and other areas of the budget took huge hits. Closing a $46.8 billion deficit required:

  • Reducing funding for every area of government expenditure except education
  • Draining rainy day reserves
  • Delaying spending
  • Deferring payments to later years
  • Cutting, cutting, cutting.

The result is very complex. The new technically balanced budget went into effect July 1, 2024 with machinations only an accountant would love.

Funding Chart

Based on enacted budget 2024

Chart: Ed100 Source: State Budget Get the data Embed  Created with Datawrapper

Want the gory details? knock yourself out.

Quick budget explainer

Each year, California’s state constitution requires a portion of the state budget to be set aside for K-14 education (that is, K-12 and public community colleges). The protected funds, known as the Proposition 98 minimum guarantee, come to about 40% of the General Fund of the state budget. Overall, the budget for 2024-25 increases funding for education. Here’s the link to K-12 Proposition 98 Funding by Program.

Most of the money in the Prop. 98 education budget is allocated to school districts through the Local Control Funding Formula (LCFF). This money pays for operating costs like salaries for educators, administrators, and counselors in virtually all California public schools. Costs for transportation and building maintenance fall in this category, too. LCFF funding increased by approximately $983 million over last year.

The budget includes restricted money that must be spent on specific educational programs. These include, for example, American Indian programs, Child Nutrition, Foster Youth, Special Education and arts education.

California Education Budget — Key Numbers

Prop. 98 minimum guarantee for Pre-K-12 schools and community colleges

2024-25: $115.3 billion

2023-24: $98.5 billion

2022-23: $103.7 billion

Per Pupil Spending (using attendance assumptions.)

2024-25: $18,399

2023-24: $17,658

When you add additional federal funds and other sources, the grand total is $24,313 per student in attendance, according to state budget assumptions about attendance rates.

LCFF funding

Increase of approximately $983 million over last year.

Education Rainy Day Fund balance

2024-25: $1.1 billion

* 2023-24: $0

2022-23: $8.4 billion

* The education rainy day fund was used up to fund schools this year. (See the $0 above for 2023-24). The state budgeted $1.1 billion to establish a small reserve in 2024-25.

Want even more nitty-gritty details? Revel in Schedule 6100 of the state budget.

What has been cut?

Funding for education in the 2024-25 General Fund budget was preserved at the expense of cuts in every other area. In combination, K-12 education ($81.5 billion) and higher education ($23.4 billion) comprise nearly half (47%) of the state General Fund.

budget chart

Although this budget sustains funding for education, a number of significant education-related measures failed to advance. These include the School Facility Aid Program, the California Preschool, Transitional Kindergarten and Full day kindergarten grant program, and funds for Zero-Emission School Buses.

New attendance recovery rule

Unlike most states, California allocates funding to school districts based on student Average Daily Attendance (ADA). When students miss school, districts don’t receive LCFF funding for them.

Because of chronic absences and learning loss, California legislators wanted to find a way to help school districts reduce the absence numbers in the future. Here’s the plan: Beginning in 2025-26, schools will be able to add up to 10 days of attendance recovery time per pupil to offset absences. This includes summer school, intersessional school, weekends, or before/after school. These programs must be taught by certificated teachers, be exempt from minimum day requirements, and be non-compulsory.

A note of caution

Budgets are built on predictions. Will Californians actually earn income and pay taxes at the levels the state Department of Finance has predicted in the budget? No one knows for certain. The state Department of Finance tracks key indicators monthly, relying on information like incoming taxes. In 2024 the budget process was unusually difficult because the 2023 tax filing deadline was substantially extended.

The state Legislative Analyst Office (LAO), a nonpartisan agency independent from the Department of Finance, predicts that the three years ahead could be rough sledding:

report

Specific education investments

The budget contains significant investments that parents and communities have asked for. Ed100 lessons and blog posts linked below help explain the issues.

Education investments in the 2024-25 budget, by category
(See enacted budget summary)

Transitional kindergarten and early education

Approximately $3 billion to cover expanded eligibility for transitional kindergarten

Ed100 blog How does California's Pre-K education system work

The Arts and Music in Schools

$907.1 million: Funding Guarantee and Accountability Act (Proposition 28)

Ed100 blog: Schools have new money for arts education. What should they do now?

Nutrition

$179.4 million ongoing and and $120.8 million one-time to fully fund the universal school meals programs. This is on top of $1.6 billion in base funding for the program.

Ed100 lesson: Health and Learning

Teacher preparation and development



Literacy screening training: $25 million

Ed100 blog: It’s time to screen all students for dyslexia risks

New math curriculum training: $20 million

Ed100 blog: Solving California’s math problem

Classified School Employee Summer Assistance Program

$9 million one-time



Curriculum-Embedded Performance Tasks for Science

$7 million

Ed100 blog: California's New Science Standards

California Teachers Collaborative for Holocaust and Genocide Education

$5 million

After School Education and Safety Programs

$5 million

Ed100 lesson: What Should Happen After School?

State Special Schools Infrastructure Support

$3.4 million

Ed100 lesson: Special Needs: Why Not Teach All Kids Alike

K-12 High Speed Network

$3.2 million

Ed100 blog: Can a Crisis Finally Close the Digital Divide?

Parks Access

$2.1 million for public school fourth graders to access California state parks.

Inclusive College Technical Assistance Center

$2 million so that students can apply for the Free Application for Federal Student Aid, plan for post secondary transition, and identify financial assistance opportunities

Ed100 lesson: Paying for college

Support for student leadership

$0 !!!

Student representation in California’s education system has long subsisted on a tiny line item in the budget that enables CASC.net to run vital programs. This crucial function, which involves hundreds of students and influences thousands, was not funded in this year's budget.

How does California pay for schools?

Funding for public K-12 education in California comes from three main sources: state income taxes, local property taxes, and the federal budget, in that order. The portion from each source has varied over time.

State income taxes that go toward education are strongly influenced by the economy, the stock market, and the terms of Proposition 98.

Property taxes that go toward education (and which are included in calculation of the Prop 98 guarantee) were more or less set in stone by voters who passed Proposition 13 in 1978.

Federal funds for public education were temporarily elevated by pandemic programs.

Tax Funding Chart
quote marks

California no longer lurks in the basement of national school funding.”

Per student expenditures

More about the Local Control Funding Formula

LCFF funding is distributed on the basis of student attendance, with some adjustments. School districts, charter schools and county offices of education receive additional funding for low income students, English learners, homeless and foster youth. Here’s a summary of how LCFF works:

  • The base funding amount per student in attendance varies a little by grade level.
  • Added to that is supplemental funding based on the number of students with higher needs.
  • Districts with a very high percentage of needy students get even more support through a concentration grant.
  • A recent addition to this is the equity multiplierThis provides additional funding for school sites with prior year non stability rates greater than 25 percent and prior year socioeconomically disadvantaged pupil rates greater than 70 percent.

Not all school districts are part of the LCFF system. It’s instructive to learn about Basic Aid districts, which don’t receive their funding through the formula.

Getting to the source

This rather epic post is only possible because detail-oriented people do the important work of making information available even as it changes through the budget process. If this sort of stuff interests you, here are some resources you should know about:

This article is from Ed100.org , a free web resource to help you learn more about education. Sign up here.

Carol Kocivar is a children’s advocate and lives in the Westside. Feedback: kocivarATwestsideobserver.com

August 2024


Have Your Say

More Trending Articles



Granny Dumping Graphic

City’s Granny Dumping Spike

City Health Department’s Missing Report Concealed Shameless Patient Dumping

by Patrick Monette-Shaw

The hospitals shed their Skilled Nursing bed capacity in the City’s private sector hospitals en masse. It Was adversely affecting profits

Check it out

West Portal Notebook

Papenhausen Hardware on West Portal

West Portal Merchants Want Cameras & Cops

by Maura Corkery

Police patrolling up and down the block, speaking to residents, shop owners significantly prevents possible crime.

Check it out


Lady in Wheelchair

An Open Letter to City Hall

Laguna Honda may not close
—but is it open?

by Dr. Teresa Palmer

There is a dire shortage of nursing home beds in SF—especially for those on Medi-Cal—which pays for chronic long-term care when a resident cannot afford $15,000 a month.

Read More

D7 Supervisor Candidates

District 7 Candidates for Supervisor

Do you support
Mayor Breed’s Upzoning?

Doug Comstock

Mayor Breed has proposed an unprecedented rollback of San Francisco’s height and density limitations that would allow six story buildings in areas previously zoned for one and two-story construction

Check it out

Protesting Climate inaction

We Can’t Wait

by Dr. Ahimsa Porter Sumchai

The slow pace of climate action has never been about lack of science or even lack of solutions; it has always been about lack of political will.

Check it out

Laguna Honda graphic

Newly recertified
—same old problems

Laguna Honda Recertified:
Hold the Fireworks

by Patrick Monette-Shaw

How long will the Health Commission delay the “LHH sustainability plan” that will shape its management in the future?

Check it out

© 2023 Westside San Francisco Media. No portion of the articles or artwork may be republished without expressed consent. Legal disclaimer.